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Friday, August 2, 2013

The Advice of Air and Wolf

Today I pulled the Ace of Swords for my daily draw (using DruidCraft Tarot - Philip and Stephanie Carr-Gomm and Will Worthington). Phew! This is really good, and also really challenging.

Yesterday evening we received our oldest daughter’s grades
for last year (why so late??) and they were not particularly good. Yet her State test scores were far
above average. We know she is
capable of doing the work, but she daydreams a lot, and keeps a lot of her
thoughts and feelings inside, and that combination has really created some
obstacles in the past. She will
make some decisions that are not ideal, and when it creates a major problem she
does feel bad and accept responsibility…. But then soon she falls back into her
own private world and the cycle continues. I ask myself what I can do better as a parent to help guide
her, help her with structure. I
pulled three cards from my Morgan Greer deck last night asking, “What should I understand about my
daughter?”

I pulled the 7 of Cups, Justice, and the High
Priestess.

Morgan Greer Tarot

Yep. The 7 of
Cups represents how much time she spends entertaining herself, distracting herself,
with exciting ideas and fantasies – none of which she ever turns into an actual
project or activity in the real world (even despite our continual
encouragement). The High Priestess
is her hidden world. In the Morgan
Greer deck the High Priestess sits before a curtain with her feet resting on
the moon. Behind the curtain you
can see that there is an ocean beyond, but it’s mostly hidden. The moon signifies many things, but one
of those things is illusion. For
me this card represents how while my daughter always seems cool, calm and
collected, underneath the surface she is feeling a lot of things that she keeps
to herself. She gives the illusion
that all is well in her world, when the reality might not be at all that
way. For me Justice represents her
brief moments of clarity, when she realizes that she keeps stepping in the same
hole (so to speak), and she feels a sense of responsibility for her behavior,
and understands the need to make some changes. But Justice is flanked by two water cards – while air and
water get along okay, the predominance of water makes me feel that her
daydreaming and hidden world are why she keeps returning to the same
patterns. She is a teenager, but
she’s still young. I’m not sure
she can find that extra “air” to help sort things out.

DruidCraft Tarot

That’s where the Ace of Swords comes in. I really want to help guide her in a
nurturing but firm manner. While I
am frustrated by the poor performance, I feel for her, and oftentimes end up
focusing more on her feelings rather than finding a solid solution for
her. Which is not a true help, I
think, in the long-run. What the
Ace of Swords is telling me to do is to put the emotions aside for now, and
figure out a rational, well-thought-out plan that will provide her with the
extra scaffolding she needs to be successful. The Ace of Swords shows a sword breaking through illusion and emotion. This is a great analogy for the need for Jorge and I to break through the illusion of our daughter's mind-set and emotional state, and work with her where she truly is. In the past we’d have long discussions, tears, lots of hugs,
and then we’d feel like we made progress and we’d let it go. That was an error. It’s time for a change in how we work
with her, which will hopefully result in real change all the way around, and
will end in a happy, successful kid, and happy, relieved parents. I’m ready for that challenge.

One additional note (this is several hours after posting this): I am definitely pulling on the Ace of Swords at work today, too. I've been placed in a leadership position for a group assignment, and some of the members on the team are resentful and uncooperative. I am definitely rather Cupsy, and always strive for harmony, and am always considering people's feelings. In this case I need to buck up and take on this challenge. I need to let go of my concern about what others think of me, especially when the dislike stems from negativity rather than reality. I need to be a leader, a fair leader, but the focus must be on the facts, on honesty, and strength. Difficult, but a worthy lesson for me.

I also pulled a card from the Druid Animal Oracle (Philip and Stephanie Carr-Gomm and Will Worthington). I didn’t pull it in relation to this
situation, just for additional advice.
I pulled the Wolf, and it really works in harmony with yesterday’s
Hermit card pull.

The Wolf encourages me to recognize that to grow deeper I
need to take on challenges that may cause me anxiety. This does have a relation to the issue with my daughter, but
I feel it relates most strongly to my Tarot study. I’ve been going deeper into Tarot, but knowing that at some
point I need to dive into reading for strangers. This causes me anxiety, and I ask myself, “What if I don’t
connect? What if my reading is
completely off? What if the client
tells me that my interpretation has no relationship to their lives??” Well, that is a little overboard. I already know that it wouldn’t be that bad. The accuracy of the readings I do has been high, and
the work I’m doing practicing my story-weaving skills (based on strangers’
online spread postings) has shown me that I’m not entirely inept. But those concerns continue to haunt me a bit. At the same time I know that taking
that leap into free-reading is a critical step to my development as a card
reader. And I actually do want to
do it. So in that respect the Wolf
(“intuition, learning, the Shadow”) is encouraging me to accept my fears and
move past them into deeper waters.
I’m grateful for the advice. <3

4 comments:

A word of warning, you may sometimes get clients who say you're totally off, or who come and say they just want to test you out. I think a lot of it is about people's defences, so even if they say you're all wrong, keep faith. Maybe they just can't bear how right you are!